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This lyric must give English teachers fits. '[A]n American' is a person, but 'where' refers to a place! What makes this particularly inexcusable is that the lyric could have been easily fixed by changing 'an American' to 'in America'... since Mr. Greenwood does not mention any place.

Submitted by: Joshua Truax

"God Bless The USA"

The Nonsensical Lyrics:

I'm proud to be an American, where at least I know I'm free ...

Why They're Nonsensical:

The "at least" is inappropriate to the theme of the song. "At least" implies a small consolation, such as, "I'm proud to be at Wal-Mart, where at least the parking's free." ... An example of revised lyrics would be, "I'm proud to be an American, and to know I'm strong and free."

While the singer's patriotic sentiments are touching, the relationship of dependent and independent clauses here just doesn't work. That is because the connector, where, is a place-referent connector and therefore needs an antecedent of place in the independent clause. But there is no antecedent of place. That is to say, "I'm proud to be in America, Where at least I know I'm free" would work grammatically, but the actual lines here don't, since "an American" does not imply a place, but is followed by "where", which needs to refer back to a place.